Which "Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs"?
Few had heard of Derek and Dominoes nor did many know that "Derek" was Eric The album stiffed until word spread on "the street" and Atlantic Records began taking a more active role promoting it. Actually, the record was a Polydor U.K. production licensed to Atlantic and that too might have hindered the initial promotion drive. Even after corrective action had been taken, the album peaked at No. 16 on The Billboard album charts, which is kind of pathetic for an album that has become a well-deserved classic and contains some of the most compelling and heartfelt singing by anyone ever in rock.
You have Duane Allman on most of it plus the true "all-star" rhythm section of Carl Radle, Bobby Whitlock and Jim Gordon. And of course Eric singing his heart out about "Layla", and enough has already been written about that so not going to again.
So how good is Mobile Fidelity's reissue? I compared it to two original Atco pressings ( SD 2-704) pressed at Presswell) and to the DirectDisk Labs "Super Disk" 1/2 speed re-master (SD-2-16629) cut at the JVC Cutting Center in Hollywood, CA and pressed (according to the jacket) at Direct Disk Labs. Did Direct Disk really have its own pressing plant? I doubt it.
In any case, here's what I found: a clean original cut at Atlantic Studios from the then fresh master tape (or from a copy thereof) is difficult to find (almost all on Discogs were VG or at best VG+), that's in part due to the poor quality vinyl used in America during that period of time, exacerbated a few years later by an oil shortage caused by the OPEC embargo. However, by the early '70s as vinyl record consumption skyrocketed, quality really began to deteriorate. And of course those fold down Silverstone changers did not help!
The two original copies I have definitely have a transparency (within what is a murky recording) on top lacking in the Mo-Fi reissue but otherwise the new Mo-Fi reissue stomps all over the original in terms of background quiet, dynamics and especially bottom end drive and timbral accuracy. The original's bottom end is a thuddy, timbrally indistinct mess compared to the Mo-Fi's clarity.
Clearly the Mobile Fidelity mastering team of Krieg Wunderlich and Rob LoVerde put in the hours to lock in the bottom end of this recording, particularly Jim Gordon's toms, that have never before sounded this convincing. The entire bottom end, somewhat rolled on the original and definitely anemic on the Direct Disk edition (which also loses points for sequencing the record 1-4/2-3 for changers!), is ideal on the Mo-Fi reissue, while everything else is as good as can be expected from a 45+ year old tape that was reputed to have not been in great shape to begin with. Either the tape was in better condition than has been reported or the Mo-Fi boys worked miracles or maybe both.
There's genuine mastering artistry in these grooves both musically and technically. Look, this was never a sonic spectacular and while the original may be somewhat airier and more expansive on top, that difference is more at the margins while everything else on this Mobile Fidelity reissue is far and surprisingly better .
With Clapton and Duane Allman wailing on guitars propelled by a spectacular rhythm section (parts of which even those very familiar with the album will be hearing as if for the first time), you are guaranteed to play your best air guitar. And knowing what everyone now knows about Clapton's love-obsession, if side 3's lineup of "Tell the Truth", "Why Does Love Have to Be So Bad", and "Have You Ever Loved a Woman" doesn't break your heart, you haven't got one.